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Alia Volz

Bastille Day Gets The Litquake Treatment

July 14th, 2011 – 8:00PM

San Francisco’s Literary Festival presents Cabaret Bastille, an evening that celebrates left bank bohemia and the American authors who left the US for La Ville Lumiere in the 20s to pursue their literary destiny, champagne (occasionally real pain) and sex, love and more, more, more; Authors who will channel their Jazz Age counterparts include Alan Black as his nemesis James Joyce, Alia Volz tapping into her inner Anais Nin and Joshua Mohr bringing dirty boy/literary savant Henry Miller for a visit to 2011, among others

With emcee Tara Jepsen presiding as Gertrude Stein, the evening will also feature wine, cocktails, beer, an Absinthe fountain, exotic dancing, blue films from the 20s, and at least one accordion; flappers and dandies welcome

Bastille Day Thursday, July 14, 2011, 8pm to Midnight; Admission $13.00 in advance/ $15.00 at door

Unlike the recent Woody Allen film Midnight in Paris, where actors conjured up the legendary writers and personalities of the era, Cabaret Bastillewill allow the writers and personalities of our own era to channel their 20s heroes, counterparts and in at least in one case, a nemesis of sorts, by reading some of their most memorable passages.

Authors on deck include

Scotsman, author and sometime malcontent Alan Black as James Joyce

Matt Stewart (whose book The French Revolution was the first full length novel to be published on Twitter) as Ford Maddox Ford

Attendees can also expect blue movies from the 20s, exotic dancing, a round or two of exquisite corpse, along with the plaintive accordion sounds of Angus Martin accompanied by vocalist Gabrielle Ekedal.

No host bar includes beer, wine and Tri-color cocktails and an Absinthe fountain

About Litquake BP
Litquake, San Francisco’s annual literary festival, was founded by Bay Area writers in order to put on a week-long literary spectacle for book lovers, complete with cutting-edge panels, unique cross-media events, and hundreds of readings. Since its founding in 1999, the festival has presented more than 2800 author appearances for an audience of over 67,000 in its lively and inclusive celebration of San Francisco’s thriving contemporary literary scene. Litquake seeks to foster interest in literature, perpetuate a sense of literary community, and provide a vibrant forum for Bay Area writing as a complement to the city’s music, film, and cultural festivals. Dates: 10/7-15, 2011. www.litquake.org